After much speculation, Facebook has imposed restrictions on live-streaming following the New Zealand attacks in March.

Announced on Tuesday, the company will implement a “one strike” policy which will restrict anyone who violates the social network’s community standards from using Facebook Live.

Users who violate the network’s most serious policies will be prohibited from using Live for a certain period of time, which will begin from their first offence. One example of an offence is a user who “shares a link to a statement from a terrorist group with no context.”

Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of integrity, said in the blog post that the company’s goal was “to minimize risk of abuse on Live while enabling people to use Live in a positive way every day.”

Rosen said these restrictions will be extended to other areas of the platform over the next few weeks, which will begin with restricting offending users from taking out ads.

Prior to this, Facebook had simply taken down content that violated its community standards, and if that person kept posting violating content they’d be blocked from the whole platform for a period of time. Some were banned altogether.